Friday, September 29, 2017

Kenneth Branagh, the director and star of the forthcoming motion picture adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, has recorded a new audiobook version of the Queen of Mystery’s bestseller for HarperCollins. The new digital audio is on-sale October 31st, prior to the nationwide release of Murder on the Orient Express in the United States on November 10th.

Kenneth Branagh, who plays Poirot in the Twentieth Century Fox adaptation, recorded the new audiobook for HarperCollins UK. He is the latest actor to take on the legendary detective, following portrayals from actors including Charles Laughton, Albert Finney, Peter Ustinov and David Suchet.

HarperCollins Publisher of Estates, David Brawn, said: “Agatha Christie has been a jewel in HarperCollins crown for nearly half of our 200 years of publishing, so how wonderful that in our anniversary year comes one of the most exciting Christie adaptations in many years. Murder on the Orient Express is one of her most important and celebrated works, and of course it features probably her greatest creation, Hercule Poirot. Kenneth Branagh is inspired casting and it is wonderful that, as well as directing and starring in the film adaptation, he is narrating a new audiobook of the original text, which will mesmerise fans new and old.

November 2017 will see the release of 20th Century Fox’s feature film adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express. The film will be directed by five-time Academy Award nominee Kenneth Branagh, who will also star as Poirot. Branagh helms an all-star cast that includes Judi Dench, Johnny Depp, Michelle Pfeiffer, Penelope Cruz, Olivia Colman, Willem Dafoe, Daisy Ridley, Tom Bateman, Derek Jacobi, Josh Gad, Leslie Odom Jr, Sergei Polunin and Lucy Boynton.

Earl Javorsky (www.earljavorsky.com) is the author of Down to No Good and Down Solo. He also works as a copy editor and proofreader in San Diego.

Earl Javorsky:Chameleon

I came of age at the cusp of two defining eras. The mid-sixties was a hell of a time to be a teenager, and a hell of a confusing one. Cognitive dissonance would have required objectivity unavailable to a privileged white boy from Brentwood, California. How else to reconcile a love for all things James Bond—bespoke suits and a silenced Beretta—with Woody Guthrie and Jack Kerouac? My upbringing in a family of classical musicians and my love for Jimmy Reed and Freddy McDowell? My step-father’s Republicanism and my draft-card burning?
And yet this cultural disconnect was a repeat performance for me.

My parents brought me to Queens from Berlin in 1952, when I was two. The family mythology includes the story of my entering preschool at three and returning home refusing to talk. After several months of shaking or nodding my head and pointing at things I wanted, I suddenly—with no particular prompting—started speaking unaccented English. When the family talked to me in German, I declined, saying, “That’s baby talk.” I never spoke it again.

When I was five, my mother left me with her parents, also in Queens, and sometime later my grandmother took me to Las Vegas, where we camped in a motel. One day my mom arrived in a brand new Cadillac driven by John, a Hollywood actor, and off we went to Los Angeles.

Strangely, my new dad had been a lieutenant on a US destroyer off the coast of Italy during World War II. My birth father had been an aerial photographer in North Africa under Rommel.

Just when I had settled into my new life on the West Side, we moved to Bermuda so my stepfather could film a TV series, and I was put in a snooty prep school where we had to wear flannel shorts and a blazer and tie and take Religious Instruction along with our academic classes. Naturally, the kids made fun of my American accent. Naturally, I adapted.

Somewhere along the line, my stepfather legally changed his name from John Cox to John Howard, the name Paramount Studios had given him. This gave me a third last name: I was born Daniel Earl Javorsky, became Daniel Cox, and, finally, landed on Dan Howard, which I stuck with until it was time to publish a book. I chose Earl Javorsky, partly to honor my father and partly for its eccentricity. An unexpected bonus was that it was unique in Google searches.

I write all this because it interests me to reflect on some unintended themes that, looking back, I recognize in my novels. All three books have characters who have alternate identities, though in my first, Down Solo, the name change is forced upon my protagonist. And two of my books are about characters who are not what they appear to be; beyond simply using aliases, they are pretenders.

Some years back, a movie was made about my dad, Heinz Javorsky, who after the war continued his career as a cinematographer. Oddly, it was called “Chameleon Cameraman.”

Headliners:Marcia Clark’s book on the Simpson case, WITHOUT A DOUBT, became a #1 bestseller. Clark’s new best-selling crime fiction series with criminal defense attorney, Samantha Brinkman, debuted in May 2016 with the publication of BLOOD DEFENSE.

Wendy Corsi Staub (aka Wendy Markham) is THE NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY best-selling author of more than eighty novels and has a Hallmark movie based on her books. Renowned for her tales of suspense, she has twice been nominated for the Simon & Schuster Mary Higgins Clark Award.

Host:Barbara Demarco-Barrett’s first book, PEN ON FIRE: A Busy Woman’s Guide to Igniting the Writer Within, made the Los Angeles Times best-seller list and received an American Society of Journalists and Authors Outstanding Book Award.

Authors:Jill Amadio is an author, ghostwriter, and journalist. Her mystery series set in Orange County includes DIGGING TOO DEEP and DIGGING UP THE DEAD She has also written memoirs and true crime.

Greta Boris is the author of the 2017 releases, A MARGIN OF LUST and THE SCENT OF WRATH, the first two books in her 7 Deadly Sins domestic suspense series.

Carola Dunn is the author of over 60 books, most set in England where she was born. Her Daisy Dalrymple series is set the 1920s; the 23rd -THE CORPSE AT THE CYSTAL PALACE debuts in 2018.

Naomi Hirahara is the Edgar Award-winning author of two mystery series set in Los Angeles. Her Mas Arai series, which features a Hiroshima survivor and gardener, has been translated into Japanese, Korean and French. The first, SUMMER OF THE BIG BACHI, is being developed into an independent film.

Sybil Johnson is the author of the Aurora Anderson Mystery series set in the world of tole/decorative painting (FATAL BRUSHSTROKE, PAINT THE TOWN DEAD and A PALETTE FOR MURDER).

Elizabeth Little is the president of Mystery Writers of America SoCal and the author of DEAR DAUGHTER, a L.A.Times bestseller and winner of the Strand Critics Award for Best First Novel.

Nadine Nettmann, a Certified Sommelier through the Court of Master Sommeliers, has traveled to wine regions around the world including Chile, South Africa, Spain, Germany, and every region in France. Her debut novel, DECANTING A MURDER, was nominated for the Anthony, Agatha, and the Lefty Awards.

Kaira Rouda is a USA Today bestselling, multiple award-winning, author. Her latest novel, BEST DAY EVER is a major launch title for Harlequin’s new imprint Graydon House and just debuted September 19.

Jeri Westerson is a L.A. native and award-winning author. She writes the critically acclaimed Crispin Guest Medieval Mysteries and the new urban fantasy series BOOKE OF THE HIDDEN.

Patricia Wynn loves stories about characters with secret identities, a scheme she’s used in several of her 16 published novels, including the award-winning Blue Satan mystery series with an 18th century highwayman as amateur detective.

Pamela Samuels Young is an attorney and mystery writer whose award-winning legal thrillers are known for their unexpected twists and strong female characters. Dubbed "John Grisham with a sister’s twist," Pamela has penned seven thrillers, including her latest, LAWFUL DECEPTION.

The Bouchercon National Board of Directors has selected George Easter as the recipient of its 2017 David Thompson Special Service Award for “extraordinary efforts to develop and promote the crime fiction field.”

The David Thompson Special Service Award is given by the Bouchercon Board to honor the memory and contributions to the crime fiction community of David Thompson, a much beloved Houston bookseller who passed away in 2010. Past recipients of the award include Ali Karim, Marv Lachman, Len & June Moffatt, Judy Bobalik, Otto Penzler, and Bill and Toby Gottfried.

Founded in 1970, and named after distinguished mystery critic, editor, and author, Anthony Boucher, Bouchercon is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that each year brings together fans, authors, publishers, editors, agents, and booksellers from around the world in a different location for a four-day celebration of their shared love of the crime genre. This year's Bouchercon, Passport to Murder, will take place in Toronto, October 12-15, 2017.

George Easter is the Founder, Editor, and Publisher of Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine, one of the premiere review periodicals in the mystery community. Deadly Pleasures, a great resource for readers, was started in 1992. DP also includes news of forthcoming releases in the U.S. and abroad, and columns, reviews, and interviews from an international group of contributors. Sneak previews of upcoming books are divided into soft boiled, hardboiled, medium boiled and more. Deadly Pleasures was nominated four times for an Anthony Award for Best Mystery Magazine and won the Anthony for Best Critical/Biographic Work in 1999.

But Deadly Pleasures was not enough for George, being a fan’s fan, and in 1997 he conceived the Barry Awards (named after fan Barry Gardner) that are presented by Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine in various categories for excellence. George also presents the Don Sandstrom Memorial Award for Lifetime Achievement in Mystery Fandom (named after fan Don Sandstrom).

George has served on the Bouchercon National Board, has attended every Bouchercon, except two, since 1991 in Pasadena, CA, and volunteered to produce the Program Book for the 2000 Bouchercon in Denver, CO. He was also responsible for getting publishers to donate books to the Book Bazaar giveaway at last year’s Bouchercon in New Orleans.

The Bouchercon Board is pleased to honor George Easterwith the David Thompson award for all he has contributed to the mystery community and for his honoring both mystery authors and fans. George Easter is truly a Fan’s Fan.

Celebrated as the “Russian Queen of Crime,” Polina Dashkova is Russia’s most successful author of crime novels. She’s sold fifty million copies of her books and has thrilled readers in countries across Europe and Asia. A graduate of Moscow’s Maxim Gorky Literary Institute, she has been active as a radio and press journalist and has worked as an interpreter and translator of English literature. Her books have been translated into German, Chinese, Dutch, French, Polish, Spanish, and English.

Polina Dashkova:Thrillers and Borsch
I'm excited to see Madness Treads Lightly translated into English for the first time. I've known since I was fourteen that one day I'd write a novel entitled Madness Treads Lightly, however, what it would be about, I had no idea. It was a one-of-a-kind event: a title popping up all by itself, before any plan, plot, or heroes, and long before I could bring myself to write fiction.

For years, that mysterious combination of words -- "Madness Treads Lightly" -- would give me no rest. It became a kind of piggy bank where I tossed coins, especially small change; brief street scenes, and snatches of conversation. Sometimes I would divine the features of my future characters in friends and strangers.

Over the years, I had managed to travel nearly the whole country, read many books on psychology, psychiatry, and criminology, and studied several serial murder cases. I also spoke with the investigators and officers who had caught said serial murderers, and spoke with forensic psychiatrists who had studied those individuals. I traveled throughout Siberia, and fifteen years after my trip, I was able to write Madness Treads Lightly.

Now I want to share my novel with you with an excerpt from chapter one of Madness Treads Lightly, and a recipe you might want to cook to get in the mood to read my novel. I am a vegetarian, so I have included a classic recipe for Russian Borsch, but with a twist—no meat! I hope you all enjoy.

Vegetarian Borsch

Important recipe notes from Polina:

**If you want your borsch to be not only delicious but good for health and salubrious, please do not fry your vegetables in oil!

**If you put garlic – don't use onion! If you want to add onion – don’t use garlic!**Don’t use lemon or tomato – you don’t want your borsch to sour too soon.

Directions
Using a large pot, boil 8-10 cups of water.
Add 1 tbsp of salt.
Add chopped beets, cabbage, celery, and parsley roots.
Cover pot, reduce heat to low, and simmer for 30-40 minutes.
When the liquid becomes a beautiful deep purple color, add diced potatoes, carrots, and crushed garlic and cook for another 10 minutes or so.
Add 2-3 tablespoons of olive oil last.
Add bay leaves and continue cooking for another 5 minutes.
Remove borsch from the heat.
Let soup cool and chill overnight.
When you are ready to serve, add a dollop of sour cream and fresh herbs to each bowl.
You may also add some black olives or serve with rye bread, which makes the borsch taste especially good!

Excerpt from first chapter of MADNESS TREADS LIGHTLY:

"A big bag of groceries was hanging off the stroller handle, so the second Lena lifted Liza to seat her properly, the stroller tipped all the way back and the bag split open.

"All fall down," Liza summed things up with a sigh, gazing from her mama's arms to the groceries strewn through the muck.

"Yes, my love, all fall down. Now we'll pick it all up."
Lena had carefully set her daughter on the sidewalk and was picking the groceries out of the slush and brushing them off with her glove when she noticed someone in a blue Volvo parked across the street, watching her intently. The tinted windows reflected the snowdrifts and pedestrians, so Lena couldn't see exactly who was watching her, but she could feel that person's gaze.

"We do make an entertaining spectacle." She grinned as she managed to reattach the bag to the stroller handle, get Liza seated, and shake the dirt off her leather gloves.

When she turned into her own courtyard, she spotted the Volvo again. It drove by very closely, at minimum speed, as if the people in it wanted to remember exactly which door the young mother with the stroller entered.

There were two of them--a woman behind the wheel and a man in the passenger seat. Lena didn't get a good look at them, but they got an excellent one of her.

"Are you certain?" the woman asked quietly after the door shut behind Lena.

"Absolutely. She's barely changed in all these years."

"She has to be thirty-six now," the woman observed.
"And that young mama couldn't be over twenty-five. And the child's so young. You haven't mixed something up? It's been a few years after all."

Dashkova tells the story of a working mother, Lena Polyanskaya, who is busy caring for her two-year-old daughter, editing a successful magazine, and supporting her husband, a high-ranking colonel in counterintelligence. Lena doesn’t have time to play amateur detective. But when a close friend’s suspicious death is labeled a suicide, she’s determined to prove he wouldn’t have taken his own life...even though she fears she might be the next victim.

Rosh Hashana, the beginning of the Jewish New Year, begins tomorrow night. The Days of Awe are the days between the beginning of the New Year and Yom Kippur.

Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, is the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.
That a murder would take place on Yom Kippur (or during the Days of Awe)
runs opposite to Jewish belief. Let's hope murders only take place in fiction!

Here's a short list of Mysteries that take place on Rosh Hashana, the Days of Awe, and/or Yom Kippur. As always, I welcome any additions to this list.

Mysteries set during the Days of Awe

Three Weeks in October by Yael DayanDays of Atonement by Michael GregorioYom Kippur Murder by Lee HarrisA Guide for the Perplexed by Dara Horn Day of Atonement by Faye KellermanSaturday the Rabbi Went Hungry by Harry KemelmanThe Day of Atonement by David LissA Possibility of Violence by D.A. Mishani Nights of Awe by Harri NykanenDevil Among Us by Jack Winnick

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Acorn TV announced the return of one of the most popular series in Britain and Acorn’s best-selling series with Doc Martin, Series 8 beginning its Exclusive U.S. Premiere on Thursday, September 21, 2017, the day after its British premiere on ITV.

Martin Clunes returns in his lead performance as a tactless, self-centered, and uptight doctor in a quirky seaside town in Cornwall. After having therapy to save their marriage in the last season, Doc Martin and Louisa (Caroline Catz) face the challenge of living happily together with their baby, James Henry. The new eight-episode season premieres every Thursday through November 9, 2017 when the complete season will be available for binge-watching.

Mark Stevens, President of Acorn Brands at RLJ Entertainment, noted, “Acorn TV is ecstatic to exclusively offer our subscribers new episodes of one of their favorite series, Doc Martin. After waiting two years for more episodes, we’re delighted to shorten the wait for North American fans, and will be offering each new episode the day after its UK debut.

Richard Halliwell, DRG CEO, added, “We are thrilled that Acorn TV continues to support Doc Martin, by offering the brilliant new series to its subscribers in North America. With its human stories, fish-out-of-water lead and universal themes, Doc Martin continues to resonate with audiences around the world. And of course, the gorgeous Cornish scenery and quintessentially British eccentric characters all add to its appeal. We are proud to have this wonderful title in our catalogue and with Series Nine already in development, we can’t wait to see what’s next for Martin and the world of Portwenn.”

Acorn TV features the previous seven series available to watch anytime and recently created and added the behind-the-scenes documentary, Doc Martin: It's Always Sunny in Portwenn, with the cast and crew reflecting on eight seasons on the series and a sneak peek at Series 8.

Set in the fictional town of Portwenn, Series 8 features returning favorites Dame Eileen Atkins as the Doc’s formidable Aunt Ruth, Ian McNeice as Bert Large, Joe Absolom as his son Al. Additionally, Series 8 guest stars include Art Malik and another guest turn by Caroline Quentin. Doc Martin is created by Dominic Minghella, produced by Buffalo Pictures, and distributed by DRG.

Friday, September 15, 2017

Harlan Coben's "The Five," a
crime drama filmed in Liverpool that debuted last year on Sky 1 in the U.K., is available today (9/15) on Netflix (U.S. & Canada).

It marked bestselling author Coben’s move into TV, and follows a group
of friends as they discover that the brother of one them, who vanished
years earlier, may still be alive after his DNA turns up at a murder
scene.

The New Jersey-based author says his work is well suited to a
streaming service, where people can watch multiple episodes. “In same
way as you might say ‘I’m going to read one more chapter before I go to
sleep,’ I think ‘The Five’ and ‘Safe’ are binge-worthy shows that you
will start and finish in a day or two,” Coben told Variety.

Coben said he was pleased his new series has also landed at Netflix
internationally. “In a sense, I don’t care where it airs, just like I
don’t care if you read my book on paper or on digital, but I think it’s a
more exciting platform for us, to get all of the episodes out at one
time. I almost never watch a show that isn’t completed in case I do want
to binge. I don’t watch anything live anymore.”

Over the years, I've read just about every novel and story, play, and reference book on the Grande Dame of Crime Fiction. I've taught classes on Agatha Christie at UCB, Santa Cruz, St. Mary's College, as well as focused on Agatha Christie in my mystery book group.

Agatha Christie visited the UC Botanical Garden and was particularly taken by the Peruvian Lily. Poisonous? Yes. In honor of that long-ago visit, I organized a poison tour of the UC Botanical Garden with a very knowledgeable guide for my book group.

For Agatha Christie's Centennial, I attended the CWA (Crime Writers UK) conference in Torquay which included an Agatha Christie Centennial Celebration Banquet. Everyone was there, and by that, I mean all my favorite British crime writers and several of the actors who portrayed Christie's characters over the years. David Suchet sat at the next table. I saw Joan Hickson in the Ladies Room. During that same trip, I went with CWA to visit Greenway. This was long before it opened to the public. The family was in residence at the time, and either they forgot that a group of mystery writers was stopping by or they didn’t care, as the house was in a bit of disarray after what must have been Sunday lunch. It was a very lovely (and intimate) tour of the house.

When I returned to the States that year, I was on the organizing committee of the U.S. Agatha Christie Centennial. There were reading challenges, library talks, courses, and lectures, and I even wrote an 'Agatha-Christie inspired' interactive mystery event. It was great fun!

And here's a real treat: A Video of a 1955 interview with Agatha Christie from the BBC Archives in which Agatha Christie talks about her lack of formal education and how boredom during childhood led her to write The Mysterious Affair at Styles. She outlines her working methods, Miss Marple, Herculte Poirot, and discusses why it is much easier to write plays than novels.

Mark Ellis is a thriller writer from Swansea, Wales and a former barrister and entrepreneur. He is the creator of Frank Merlin, a Scotland Yard detective fighting crime in World War II London. The third and latest of the series, Merlin At War is being published in the U.S. on October 12th. Mark is a member of the Crime Writers’ Association and the International Thriller Writers and divides his time between London and Oxford.

Mark Ellis:Merlin at War: Influences

I am a late starter as an author. I only began to write properly after a thirty year career in business. In the latter part of that career I co-founded a computer services business with a good friend. We built the company up and were fortunate enough to sell it after ten years to the American corporation NCR. At that point I seized the opportunity to pursue my lifelong ambition of becoming a writer. In July of this year, the third book in my series about a World War II London detective, Frank Merlin, was published. It is my plan to follow Merlin in his adventures all the way through the war. Princes Gate, my first Merlin book, is set in January 1940, the time of what is now known as ‘the phoney war.’ Stalin’s Gold, the second, is set in September 1940, when the London Blitz was launched and the Battle of Britain raged. The latest book, Merlin At War, is principally set in June 1941, just after the Battle of Crete and just before Hitler invaded Russia. At this pace of historical progression, I obviously have a good deal more writing to do to get Merlin to peace in 1945!

Why did I choose to write about the WWII period? There were a number of influences. My parents lived through the war and my father fought in it. My father died when I was very young but my mother told me many fascinating stories about the period and life on the Home Front. Apart from hair-raising stories of the mass bombing and burning of my home town Swansea by the Luftwaffe, she had many interesting tales of how ordinary life carried on despite the existential threats all around. Using her railway worker’s free pass she would travel up to London from Wales with her friends at weekends to see the sights of the capital and to dance the nights away with dashing officers, even as the German bombs and doodlebugs rained down. Through this and other of her stories, I realised that as the nation battled valiantly for survival, ordinary people tried to carry on living ordinary lives. People dated, married, had babies, laughed, cried, fought, ate, drank, smoked and died natural deaths. They also stole, robbed, raped and murdered and did so at a greater rate than before in peacetime. Reported crime in England rose by almost sixty per cent between 1939 and 1945. Turning all this over in my mind as I contemplated what to write, it seemed to me that this period would a perfect one in which to set detective stories. And so this fascinating world became the world of Frank Merlin.

As to literary influences, there are too many to list here but here are a few who have been particularly important.

1. Georges Simenon – one of the most prolific authors of the 20th century and my favourite detective fiction author. His great creation, Jules Maigret, is one of the giants of the genre. One of his favourite pieces of advice, which I try to always bear in mind, is to avoid being ‘too literary’. By this he meant that writers should avoid unnecessary adjectives, adverbs or other words which are included just to make an effect. He strove for a simplicity and directness in his writing which I think enhances the power of his stories.

2. John Buchan – the author of the first adult thriller I read, The Thirty Nine Steps. I remember devouring it in a day when I was about eleven. He was a master of gripping plots. Greenmantle, the sequel to The Thirty Nine Steps, features in an unusual way in my new book.

3. Evelyn Waugh – not a thriller writer of course but he wrote a trilogy of books, known as The Sword of Honour series, set in World War II, in which there is a wonderful portrayal of life in the period. His main character, Guy Crouchback, like Waugh himself, took part in the Battle of Crete, which features in the opening scene of Merlin At War. A writer with a classically elegant and assured style much to be admired.

4. Alan Furst – the only living author in this list, Furst has written a string of masterful spy novels set in or just before WWII. He beautifully recreates the seedy, dark world of espionage in wartime Europe. He is often compared to Graham Greene and Eric Ambler, two other authors who have greatly influenced me.

5. Patricia Highsmith – creator of the great anti-hero Tom Ripley. Highsmith makes the reader stick up for Ripley, a sociopath and murderer, no matter how awful his crimes. I think of her when I'm devising my villains.

In addition to the authors above, I owe a major debt to the many excellent non-fiction writers on whose books about WWII events and personalities I have drawn and continue to draw. And then there are the many superb thriller and mystery authors writing today whose work I read avidly for pleasure and education. It seems to me that we are living in another golden age of the genre and hooray for that!

San Francisco: The Scene of the Perfect Crime. So many crime movies set in my City! What an amazing place!!!

Ali Karim reminded me of this excellent video that was written for and played at the Opening Ceremonies of Bouchercon, the World Mystery Convention, in San Francisco in 2010. This was a great tribute to the City by the Bay. Produced by Serena Bramble.

Monday, September 11, 2017

What a terrible Hurricane Season. Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma have been two of the most disastrous hurricanes on record. Sending love and positive thoughts to all in their paths. Lots of organizations need donations in order to serve the victims of these powerful storms. Goods, as well as funds are in demand. Donate now.

Not surprisingly, hurricanes have been the focus of many crime novels. Here's a list of Hurricane mysteries for those of us who prefer our hurricanes in books and not 'real life."

HURRICANE MYSTERIES

Down in the Flood by Kenneth AbelMurder with Puffins by Donna AndrewsWyatt's Hurricane by Desmond Bagley Tricky Business by Dave BarryCity of Sins by Daniel Blake Twisted by Jay BonansingaToo Much Stuff by Don Bruns Jesus Out to Sea (short stories), The Tin Roof Blowdown by James Lee Burke The Killing Storm by Kathryn CaseyNobody Knows by Mary Jane ClarkDied Blonde by Nancy Cohen Skeleton Crew by Beverly ConnorTyphoon by Joseph Conrad Skeletons of the Atchafalaya by Kent ConwellThe Sentry by Robert Crais Trojan Odyssey by Clive CusslerCategory Five by Philip Donlay Hurricane Punch by Tim DorseyHurricane by Ken Douglas Murder on the Tropic by Todd Downing First the Dead by Tim DownsTubby Meets Katrina by Tony DunbarHouse of Storm by Mignon Eberhart Zeitoun by Dave EggersSecond Wind by Dick Francis Hurricane Season by Mickey FriedmanMurder at 28:10 by Newton GayleA Dish Best Served Cold by Rosie Genova Baptism in Blood by Jane HaddamAll Together Dead by Charlaine Harris Dead Man's Island by Carolyn HartHurricane Ron by CJ Hatch Murder in the Rue Chartres by Greg Herren Stormy Weather by Carl HiassenIn Hazard by Richard Hughes Dark Rain by Mat JohnsonDamaged by Alex KavaActs of Nature by Jonathon KingMurder on the Yacht by Rufus King Dead and Alive by Dean KoontzCypress House by Michael Koryta Getting Old is a Disaster by Rita LakinA Spirited Gift by Joyce and Jim LaveneApparition Island by Jenifer LeClair Shutter Island by Dennis LehaneHer Name will be Faith by Max Marlow Storm Track by Margaret MaronToros & Torsos by CraigMcDonaldHurricane (aka Murder in the Wind), Cape Fear (aka The Executioners), Condominium by John D. MacDonaldOn Hurricane Island by Ellen MeeropolStone Cove Island by Suzanne MyersRough Weather by Robert B. Parker Island of Bones by P.J. ParrishFinal Warning by James Patterson Bloodman by Robert PobiWater Mark by J.M. RedmannStorm Surge by J.D. RhodesHurricane by Jewell Parker Rhodes Rebel Island by Rick Riordan Raw Deal by Les StandifordNew Orleans Noir, edited by Julie Smith (short stories)The Hurricane's Tail by Robert Banks StewartWithout a Grave by Marcia Talley Proof of the Pudding by Phoebe Atwood TaylorStorm Damage by Linda Underwood Murder Unleashed by Elaine VietsHurricane Song by Paul Volponi Shadows of a Cape Cod Wedding by Lea Wait (April 2013/Perseverance Press) The Eye of Anna by Anne Wingate

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Brian Thornton, Seattle-area teacher and mystery author, and president of the Northwest Chapter of the Mystery Writers of America, was presented with the Willo Award, “the Pacific Northwest’s own special recognition prize given to those individuals whose writing and contributions to the Northwest mystery community are exemplary.” The Willo is named in memory of Willo Davis Roberts, a Granite Falls, Washington, resident and Edgar Award-winning author who passed away in 2004.

“[F]ew can claim to have done more to advance the cause of mystery writers in the Northwest than Brian,” reads a notice from the MWA—Northwest Chapter. “As a longtime Board Member and President of this organization, Brian has seen us through better than a decade of ups and downs in the industry, scores of meetings and seminars, events both happy and sad, and a great growth in our numbers and our achievements. He has personally fostered the career growth of quite a few of his fellow mystery writers, and has led us with skill, enthusiasm, and an infectious smile.”

Brian Thornton is the author of nine books, including THE BOOK OF BASTARDS and THE BOOK OF ANCIENT BASTARDS, in addition to serving as collection editor for the crime fiction anthology WEST COAST CRIME WAVE. His short fiction has appeared in such venues as ALFRED HITCHCOCK’S MYSTERY MAGAZINE and the Akashic Books anthology SEATTLE NOIR.
A native Washingtonian, he is currently serving his second term as
Northwest Chapter president for the Mystery Writers of America.HT: The Rap Sheet

Amy Stewart is the New York Times best-selling author of nine books,
including the acclaimed Kopp Sisters novels, which are based on the true
story of one of America’s first female deputy sheriffs and her two
rambunctious sisters. Her popular nonfiction titles include The Drunken
Botanist, Wicked Plants, and Flower Confidential.

Many people vaguely remember hearing Amy on NPR’s Morning Edition or
Fresh Air, or maybe they read about her in a wide range of publications,
from the New York Times to Earthworm Digest. Her checkered television
career includes CBS Sunday Morning, Good Morning America, the PBS
documentary The Botany of Desire, and–believe it or not– TLC’s Cake
Boss. (The cake was delicious.)
Amy’s books have been translated into sixteen languages, one of which she can actually read. Her 2009 book Wicked Plants has been adapted into a national traveling exhibit that terrifies children at science museums nationwide.

She was awarded a National
Endowment for the Arts fellowship, the American Horticulture Society’s
Book Award, and an International Association of Culinary Professionals
Food Writing Award. In 2012, she was invited to be the first Tin House Writer-in-Residence, a partnership with Portland State University, where she corrupted young minds in the MFA program.

Her latest entry into the Kopp Sisters books is Miss Kopp's Midnight Confessions. Deputy sheriff Constance Kopp is outraged to see young women brought
into the Hackensack jail over dubious charges of waywardness,
incorrigibility, and moral depravity. But such were the laws—and
morals—of 1916. Constance uses her authority as deputy sheriff, and
occasionally exceeds it, to investigate and defend these women when no
one else will. But it’s her sister Fleurette who puts Constance’s
beliefs to the test and forces her to reckon with her own ideas of how a
young woman should and shouldn’t behave.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

I just learned of the death of Ron Tierney on September 2. Ron wrote 18 mysteries: the Deets Shanahan Mysteries, the Carly Paladino and Noah Lang mysteries, the Peter Strand Mystery Novellas, and Stand-alone Crime Fiction. Ron was also a fan of crime fiction. He blogged, and he read and contributed to blogs and fanzines.

Ronald Tierney's The Stone Veil introduced
semi-retired, Indianapolis-based private investigator "Deets" Shanahan
and the love of his life, Maureen. The book was a finalist in St. Martin
Press's "Best First Private Eye Novel" competition, and nominated for
the Private Eye Writers of America's Shamus Award for "Best First
Novel." Killing Frost is the eleventh in the highly regarded series Booklist said was "packed with new angles and delights.” San Francisco is the setting for hislighter series the Library Journal
calls a "winner.” The four Paladino/Lang books feature an eclectic
collection of investigators in the equally eclectic neighborhoods of one
of the world's most exciting cities. Good to the Last Kiss is a
dark mystery that captures the insane world a serial killer creates.

Ron Tierney was founding editor of NUVO Newsweekly,
an Indianapolis alternative newspaper, and the editor of a San
Francisco monthly. After living 25 years in the “City by the Bay,” he
moved to Palm Springs, where he was working on several writing projects. He will be missed by his many friends and readers.

Finn Bell is a finalist for the 2017 Ngaio Marsh Awardin two categories. How cool is that? Pancake Money is is up for Best Crime novel while Dead Lemons is up for Best First Novel. Finn Bell lives in the far south of New Zealand where he writes
full time. The Ngaio Marsh Awards are literary awards presented annually in New Zealand to recognize excellence in crime fiction, mystery, and thriller writing. The Award was established by journalist and crime fiction reviewer Craig Sisterson in 2010, and is named after Dame Ngaio Marsh. Today's post is part of the Ngaio Marsh Award Blog Tour (scroll down for dates and locations of future posts). Thanks, Finn, for this post. I think your books are amazing and unique!

Finn Bell:How To Do Bad Things The Wrong Way . . .

I’m Finn Bell and I write books. (And if you’re reading this to decide whether to try my books I wouldn’t recommend it. Don’t get me wrong – please buy my books so I can eat, seriously tell your friends. I just don’t think talking about something is the same as actually doing it. But we’ll get back to that later).

Instead I’ll abuse this space. Which was kindly given me to talk about myself, my writing, and my next books, to rather talk about something that I’m so much better at: Failure.

This is a true story and mine (although I suspect there’s a universal aspect to human stupidity and possibly I’m not as lonely as I feel). To start our tale, we’re going to need to go back about two decades. Witness now my former self:

There stands young Finn (poor bugger) currently being told by his favourite university lecturer (who dislikes Finn for all the right reasons) something he is (as yet) too inexperienced in the painful ways of stupidity to learn. The pearl of wisdom is this:

People who think they’re so fucking smart aren’t always as fucking smart as they think.

The reason I was being told this was because I had (almost but not quite) gotten caught. Before we talk about what I was being accused of let me first mention that I’m bad at most things (can’t sing, can’t dance, not good at any kind of sport, not easy on the eyes either, and my friends and family routinely have their overly kind patience tested by my many, many character flaws). I am and always have been however, good at learning things (I wouldn’t call myself intelligent, because intelligent people wouldn’t have done all the dumb things I have) but I’d say it’s a knack for reading fast and remembering things and for writing it all down again. Which can (trust me) be a very good substitute for actual wisdom and knowledge, if you’re making your way through university.

And I (mostly) was making my way through university. I was dirt poor, holding down two jobs at night to cover the parts of the tuition fees the academic scholarships didn’t and sleeping through most of my classes in the day time (which was fine because of my aforementioned knack). All I still had to overcome was the annoying habit of needed to eat most days. And food costs money. Which is where the wrong thing I almost got caught doing comes in.

You see universities are (luckily for my younger self) often populated by kids from rich families who have just too much money and parties in their schedule to bother with pedantic things like doing their own assignments, or preparing their own study notes for exams. It was meant to be really. So, by my 3rd year I was attending classes I wasn’t even signed up for. Churning out assignments and study notes (available at really very reasonable prices of course) on everything from law and philosophy to art history (hell I was at the point where I was taking bookings). It was wrong and I knew it but hey I was eating and it wasn’t just me doing it (the 2nd most money I ever made was selling an ethics assignment, go figure). Eventually the lecturers put just enough of it together and dragged me in to the office to thoroughly threaten me (they didn’t have enough to prove it though, I wasn’t quite that dumb) and hence I was left with that piece of advice about not being as smart as you might think (which I ignored). Thus far doing things the wrong way was working out just fine thank you.

Now fast forward several years of everything going to plan.

We find Finn walking into his upscale city-centre apartment (part of the boringly predictable trappings of success). At 30 he was the youngest national manager in his company (feel free to add any cliché of the stereotypical soul-less, career driven young man and it would probably stick).

Except today is different.

This is the very first time I come home after another long, successful day of doing bad things (now without even a hint of a possibility of getting caught) and feel absolutely fine. Not a doubt, not even an inkling of conscience. Through the sweat of my dishonest brow I had worked hard and sacrificed and gotten everything I wanted (without getting anything I needed). I had finally reached the point where all the bad things I had done didn’t even bother me one little bit. And I thought to myself that there should be a word for this, this point right at the crest of the momentum of your own wrongness.

Where you can still look over your shoulder and see right from wrong receding behind you, but really not care anymore. For that place where you realise you had become an enthusiastic part of everything you used to think was wrong with the world and know that you’re only about one effortless step away from not being able to turn around at all. That’s when I realised my old professor was right.

I wasn’t really as smart as I’d thought. You see up to that point, for me, the end justified the means. I did (as long as I could get away with it) the things that got me what I wanted. Right or wrong didn’t come into it. Survival was my excuse. In an unfair world, I had become exactly the kind of wrong person it required to succeed. Except that wasn’t really my intention when I started out. I just wanted to be happy. I wanted a good life. Not this. But somewhere along the way surviving (in increasing levels of comfort) became more important that actually living. Which even most kids will be able to tell you is plain stupid. Because the end doesn’t ever justify the means no matter what you tell yourself. So, I decided to tell myself something else. The money, the safety, the status, none of it mattered, not really. Surviving didn’t even matter, not if it meant I couldn’t live with myself. I was done doing the wrong things because they got me what I wanted. For a change (and against all my instincts) I was going to do the right thing without even caring about what it got me.

For me that’s writing books (and I’m not saying there’s anything better about writing than any other job just that for me this is that thing - where I get to be a good person doing good things, even if it means I starve). And that’s what I’d wish for all the other stupid people out there (speaking as a former member): Not that you buy my books but rather that you mess things up enough to realise that you need to risk everything to do the right thing for its own sake not yours. And that you then go and find that right thing.

John Harmon McElroy, author of Benjamin Franklin and the Quaker Murders (Penmore Press, 2017) is a professor emeritus of the University of Arizona, where he created and taught a course called Literature of the Early Republic that included Franklin's Autobiography. In addition to Benjamin Franklin and the Quaker Murders, the first novel in a series featuring Benjamin Franklin as a detective, McElroy has authored four books on American cultural history and has been a Fulbright Professor of American Studies at universities in Spain and Brazil. (More at www.benfranklindetective.com)

John Harmon McElroy:Benjamin Franklin Solves A Murder

Sometimes a work of fiction can be a more effective way of conveying truth than a history book. Biographers are committed to representing the reality of history. Writers of historical fiction have the somewhat different goal of creating the illusion of a past experience. Through my mystery novel I give readers not only “a tale that becomes more intriguing as it progresses,” but also an experience of Benjamin Franklin, the most versatile genius in that remarkable group known as America's Founders.

But, you might ask, why did I choose the form of a murder mystery as a way of portraying Franklin? Aside from being a lifelong fan of mysteries myself, it seemed to me that a mystery would be the best way to provide a close-up view of Franklin – his modus operandi, his genius, his charm, his altruism. Also, I’m convinced that more and more readers will come to admire and appreciate Franklin when they meet him “in person,” readers who might not be inclined to pick up a history book but who do enjoy a mystery that “pull[s] you forward, page by page.”

In his life Franklin did many different things. There was nothing that caught his interest that he didn’t engage with in depth. Have a kite you’re flying on the banks of a mile-wide pond? – Why not see if your kite can pull you across? (It did – and as a boy Benjamin Franklin became the first windsurfer!) Curious about the powerful ocean current known as the Gulf Stream? – Why not take temperatures to locate its eastward-moving power to speed the passage of ships to Europe? (In his eight Atlantic crossings Franklin made the first systematic study of the Gulf Stream.) Think you and your fellow tradesmen could benefit from access to more books than you can individually afford? – Why not convince the members of your club to pool their money to buy books? (Thus inventing the lending library.) And always, in pursuing his interests, he had some practical result in mind.

Franklin was also an internationally famous diplomat. His ability to charm the French into supporting the American Revolution during his nine years at the court of Louis the Sixteenth made possible the military aid – supplies, and French troops and warships – that was vital to securing U.S. independence from Britain. Then, at the war's end, he negotiated the peace settlement (the Treaty of Paris), which defined the boundaries of the United States of America.

But it was Franklin’s achievements as a world-class scientist that made me see him as a detective. After all, a detective’s procedures in gathering clues and drawing conclusions are similar to those a scientist employs in making observations and formulating a testable hypothesis about a phenomenon of nature.

In Benjamin Franklin and the Quaker Murders, all these characteristics, and more, come into play, including Franklin’s spectacular lapse of judgment in the story’s climactic showdown. (He wasn’t perfect.)

The mystery unfolds in the City of Brotherly Love when it was the largest English-speaking city in the world after London. Franklin has just come back from France only to find that Jacob Maul, the Quaker stonecutter who laid the foundations for his mansion, Franklin Court, has been jailed on suspicion of having strangled his housekeeper. A lot of circumstantial evidence points to Maul's guilt. After all, this is the second female corpse with bruise marks to the throat that has turned up on his property. But Franklin's knowledge of Maul’s character, and his noticing a coincidence that everyone else has overlooked, convince him of the Quaker's innocence.

However, in 1785 Franklin is 79 and must recruit a younger man to do the legwork for the investigation. Franklin requires a man of honor to be his assistant to keep his role secret, lest Franklin acquire an unwanted reputation for fixing his neighbors’ problems. We see Franklin’s diplomatic skills unfurl as he attempts to persuade Capt. James Jamison, a wounded veteran of the just-concluded American Revolution, to collaborate with him. Franklin’s humor, his positive outlook on life, and his bonhomie emerge and are on display throughout.

During the ins and outs of the investigation, Franklin also demonstrates the skill in making deductions from physical evidence that allowed him to solve some of the basic mysteries concerning the nature of electricity. This accomplishment prompted Scotland’s St. Andrews University to confer an honorary doctor’s degree on him. After that honor in 1759, this youngest son of a Boston candle maker, who only had two years of formal schooling, was always addressed as “Dr. Franklin.”

The secondary characters in this historical mystery, and the mystery itself, are fictional. But the details about Franklin’s life, interests, and achievements are true. Many readers say I’ve succeeded in providing an experience of Franklin and his times through a story that makes the reader “anxious to find out what happened.” One reader wrote, “I [saw] the total picture in my head of Franklin and the time period […], and I lived it as I would if watching a PBS Masterpiece Mystery. May I have another?”

You may! Benjamin Franklin and the Innocent Duelist, the next narrative in the “Benjamin Franklin, Detective” series, is written and should be out in time for Xmas.